Kaiser Media Fellowships in Health Site Visits

Published: Jan 24, 2006

and Events

Fellowship program site visits remain a central part of the redesigned Kaiser Media Fellowships in Health Program, and all Fellows, regardless of the length of their projects, atake part in the group site visits and meetings during the course of the year. The site visits and events provide journalists with the opportunity for in-depth learning about specific topics in health policy, and aim to address timely policy questions which are both current and complex. Typically, there are up to five program site visits during the fellowship year, varying in length from a couple of days to a week, for a total 4-5 weeks in any calendar year.

Fellows are consulted in planning for site visits and briefings, and are asked to contribute suggestions about topics and locations. Past programs have focused on prescription drug pricing and access to medication, safety net services and care for the uninsured, and cultural barriers to health care.

During the course of a typical fellowship year, Fellows can expect to meet in DC in September, at the Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, FL for a three day program on computer-assisted health reporting, in the Spring for a weeklong site visit, in DC in May, and in the Summer for another weeklong site visit.

Site visit topics vary greatly, but focus mainly on U.S. health policy issues such as post-Katrina Health Issues in the Gulf Coast and the Medicaid program in Florida. From time to time, we conduct site visits outside of the States to examine issues with direct relevance to the U.S. Our August 2004 site visit to Canada, for example, focused on prescription drug pricing, and our May 2003 site visit examined Brazil’s response to HIV/AIDS and the lessons to be learned for the U.S. (see the agendas below for examples of past events). While it is not required, many fellows choose to do reporting based on site visits and events, and examples of this work can be found below.

2008 Site Visits2007 Site Visits2005 Site Visits

2004 Site Visits

2003 Site Visits

2002 Site Visits


State Health Care and Reform Initiatives, Northern California – March 2008In March 2008, the Kaiser Media Fellows and invited journalists met in Northern California with state and local policymakers, migrant farm worker community representatives, and leaders from the business community for a week-long series of briefings on state and local health reform initiatives.Agenda

The Poynter Institute, St. Petersburg, Florida – November 2007In November 2007, the Kaiser Media Fellows met at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, Florida, for a three day program on multimedia reporting including database work, blogging, and podcasting. The Kaiser Media Fellowships Program take a group of journalists to the Poynter Institute each year.Agenda

Multimedia Workshop with Amy Webb – Washington, D.C., September 24-27, 2007In September, 2007, the fellows met in Washington, D.C. with Amy Webb of Webbmedia Group, LLC, for a three day workshop on multimedia tools to help them in their fellowship projects and their reporting in general. During the workshop they also received briefings on funding for global health issues and health care concerns related to immigration.Agenda

Health Issues Post-Katrina: New Orleans, LA and the Gulf Coast Region – March 2007In March 2007, the Kaiser Media Fellows and invited journalists met in New Orleans, LA and travelled to Gulfport, MS and Baton Rouge, LA for a weeklong series of briefings with health experts, policymakers and health care providers on the changing health challenges in the Gulf Coast Region.Agenda Reporting from New Orleans Site Visit

Quality of Care Issues Brifing: Washington, DC – February 2007In February 2007, the Kaiser Media Fellows met in Washington, DC, for a one-day seminar on evaluating and improving the quality of medical care.Agenda

Hospital Financing Seminar: Boston, MA – November 2006In advance of the 2006 Nieman Conference, some of the 2006 Kaiser Media Fellows attended a halfday-long seminar on hospital financing issues with Nancy Kane, Professor of Management in the Department of Health Management at the Harvard University School of Public Health.Agenda

The Poynter Institute, St. Petersburg, Florida – November 2006In November 2006, the Kaiser Media Fellows met at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, Florida, for a three day program on computer-assisted health reporting. The Kaiser Media Fellowships Program take a group of journalists to the Poynter Institute each year.Agenda

THERE WERE NO SITE VISITS BETWEEN AUGUST 2005 AND NOVEMBER 2006 WHILE THE KAISER MEDIA FELLOWSHIPS PROGRAM WAS ON HIATUS.

The VA System: Washington, DC, Wilmington, DE, Coatesville, PA, Baltimore, MD – August 2005In August 2005, the Kaiser Media Fellows and invited journalists met in Washington, DC, and traveled to Coatesville, PA, Wilmington, DE, and Baltimore, MD, for a weeklong series of briefings on the VA health care system. Agenda

Washington, D.C. – May 2005In May 2005, the Kaiser Media Fellows met in Washington, DC for briefings on SARS and Medicare Part D, and also met with the national advisory committee to discuss fellows’ projects, fellowship program experiences, and lessons for future selections. AgendaFlorida’s Medicaid Program: Tallahassee & Miami, Florida – April 2005In April 2005, the Kaiser Media Fellows and invited journalists met in Tallahassee and Miami for a weeklong series of briefings focused on Governor Bush’s proposed changes to the State’s Medicaid program, and the potential implications of such reform. Agenda

Reporting from Florida Site Visit

The Poynter Institute, St. Petersburg, Florida – November 2004In November 2004, the Kaiser Media Fellows met at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, Florida, for a three day program on computer-assisted health reporting. The Kaiser Media Fellowships Program takes a group of journalists to the Poynter Institute each year.Agenda

Washington, D.C. – September 2004In September 2004, the Kaiser Media Fellows met in Washington, DC for a series of briefings on the uninsured and the Medicare prescription drug benefit with Kaiser Foundation staff and CMS officials. Agenda

SARS & Prescription Drug Issues: Toronto & Ottawa, Canada – August 2004In August 2004, the Kaiser Media Fellows and invited journalists met in Toronto and Ottawa for a weeklong series of briefings on SARS and prescription drug issues in Canada, and to discuss the lessons to be learned for the U.S. Agenda

Reporting from Canada Site Visit

Minority Journalists’ Workshop, “Reporting on HIV/AIDS in the US,” Washington, D.C. – August 2004In August 2004 the Kaiser Media Fellowships Program held a workshop for minority journalists ahead of the UNITY: Journalists of Color, Inc. convention in Washington, D.C.Agenda Racial Barriers to Health Care: Atlanta, GA – April 2004In April 2004, the Kaiser Media Fellows and invited journalists met in Atlanta, GA for a weeklong series of briefings that examined diversity issues and barriers to health care, and the implications for the city.AgendaAIDS in America: The Forgotten Epidemic? A Conference for News Leaders,” Washington, DC – March 2004 In March 2004, The Kaiser Media Fellowships Program, in partnership with the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, hosted “AIDS in America: A Forgotten Epidemic? A Conference for News Leaders,” a conference for editors and news directors.

The conference included presentations by David Satcher, M.D., former U.S. Surgeon General, Director of the National Center for Primary Care; Julie Gerberding, M.D., Director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control; Anthony Fauci, M.D., Director of the National Institutes on Health, and others and a discussion of “AIDS at 21: Media Coverage of the HIV Epidemic 1981-2002,” a comprehensive Kaiser study published in the March/April edition of the Columbia Journalism Review.

The Poynter Institute, St. Petersburg, Florida – November 2003 In November 2003, the Kaiser Media Fellows met at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, Florida, for a three day program on computer-assisted health reporting. The Kaiser Media Fellowships Program takes a group of journalists to the Poynter Institute each year.Agenda

Washington, D.C. – September 2003 Agenda

Challenges to the County Public Health Care System: Los Angeles, CA – August 2003In August 2003, the Kaiser Media Fellows and invited journalists met in Los Angeles for a weeklong series of briefings focused on the challenges facing the Los Angeles County public health care system, including the services in place to provide care for the uninsured. Agenda

Washington, D.C. – May 2003 Agenda

Brazil’s Response to HIV/AIDS: Brazil – May 2003 In May 2003, the Kaiser Media Fellows and a group of senior health/medical journalists visited Brazil for a weeklong series of briefings on Brazil’s response to HIV/AIDS. Agenda

Reporting from Brazil Site Visit

  • Susan Dentzer, of the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, joined the Kaiser Media Fellows in Brazil to report on the country’s HIV treatment and prevention programs.
  • Sue Valentine, editor of the South African news agency Health-e, joined the Kaiser Media Fellows on the sitevisit to Brazil and reported on Brazil’s response to HIV/AIDS.
  • 2002 Kaiser Media Fellow, Jonathan Cohn’s, New Republic article, “Sexual Healing” (06/30/2003)

Airlie House Reunion, Warrenton, VA – October 2002 In October 2002, the Kaiser Media Fellowships Program hosted a reunion at the Airlie Center in Warrenton, VA, that gave the Fellows an opportunity to meet and catch up with other Fellows, the advisory committee, and other invited health journalists. Agenda

Washington, D.C. – September 2002 Agenda

Multicultural Health and Immigration Issues: Seattle, WA and Vancouver, Canada – August 2002In August 2002, the Kaiser Media Fellows and invited journalists met in Seattle, WA and Vancouver, Canada for a weeklong series of briefings on multicultural health and immigration issues. Agenda

XIV International AIDS Conference, Barcelona, Spain – July 2002 Agenda

“Covering the Global AIDS Crisis,” Columbia University, New York, NY – May 2002 Agenda

Washington, D.C. – May 2002 Agenda

Menlo Park, CA – January 2002 Agenda

Contact Information:

For more information, please email mediafellows@kff.org.

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International Health Journalism Fellowship Project: India

Published: Jan 24, 2006

International Health Journalism Fellowship Project: INDIA

Read more information about HIV/AIDS and related health issues in India on GlobalHealthReporting.org – India Country Page and in the updated fact sheet on HIV/AIDS in India. For a reporting guide on AIDS in India (available in English, Tamil, Marathi and Hindi), see The HIV/AIDS Reporting Guide for India. See the Health e-Letter, a monthly newsletter about public health in India.

About the Project

The Kaiser Family Foundation announced the new International Health Journalism Fellowship Project at the Media Leaders’ Summit, which was held at the Prime Minister’s residence in New Delhi in January 2005. The goal of the International Health Journalism Fellowship Project is to encourage substantive coverage of the health, social, economic, political and cultural implications of HIV/AIDS and associated health problems, as well as policies and programs to address HIV/AIDS and related health issues in India. Selected news organizations undertake an individually tailored project that focuses on HIV/AIDS and related health issues in India. Select examples of completed work are posted below. Please note that this program has ended and we are no longer granting these project awards.

The selected news organization designates a team of editors, reporters, photographers and/or graphic designers to lead the project. Priority is given to:

  • projects otherwise unlikely to be undertaken or completed without outside funding,
  • projects that focus on issues currently under-reported or not reported at all
  • projects that have a high likelihood of being published/broadcast and
  • are accessible to a relatively large audience

Eligibility

Awards are intended to produce in-depth, substantive and sustained reporting on HIV/AIDS and related issues. Selected broadcast news organizations may also be eligible to receive an award for in-depth reporting, to cover project expenses such as travel and research expenses typically up to and no greater than a maximum award of 220,000 Indian Rupees (approximately U.S. $5,000).

The Project in India is funded entirely through a generous grant from The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, as part of a larger initiative on increasing understanding of global health issues. The Gates Foundation is not involved in the selection of any project-award recipient, and no representation should be made that the Gates Foundation supports the activities of any project-award recipient.

What is Covered?

The project award covers travel expenses and other expenses including research, photography, internet access, telephone/fax and photocopying, laptop rental, camera crew and project-related production expenses. These expenses could include additional pages or print inserts, graphics, website information, online features such as Q&A with readers, additional television studio or editing time. Up to 20% of the award could be designated for additional staff time/salary expenses or to commission freelance contributions. The award may not be used to pay anyone who is being interviewed or who is being used in some other way as a news source.

Recent Project Events

Health e-LetterIn February 2007 Kaiser International Fellow, Kalpana Jain, launched the Health e-Letter, a monthly newsletter about public health issues in India with contributions from journalists from India and around the world.

To see past issues of the Health e-Letter click below:

2008 January 2008February 2008March 2008April 2008May 2008June 2008

2007February 2007March 2007April 2007May 2007June 2007July 2007August 2007September 2007October 2007November 2007December 2007

Fellowship Work

A selection of articles from our fellows’ work are represented below. Many of the articles are translated from their original language (Marathi or Hindi) into English for greater accessibility. It is important to note that as a result of the translations, the language in the articles may not reflect the full original intended meaning or tone.

AIDS spreading rapidly in Shekhawati region” June 9, 2006 “Anonymity of AIDS, radiance of Stars” August 19, 2006 “India becomes ‘AIDS Guru’” November 26, 2006

Partners

The Heroes Project, co-chaired by Parmeshwar Godrej and Richard Gere, seeks to harness India’s communication power and potential to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS and reduce stigma and discrimination. It works through two avenues: media partnerships and its societal leaders program.

Internews

Source: Health Care Agenda for the New Congress Survey: November, 2004

Published: Jan 23, 2006

A number of factors have been suggested as possible reasons for increasing cost of medical malpractice insurance. For each factor I mention, please tell me whether you feel it is very important, somewhat important, not too important, or not important at all in causing higher malpractice insurance costs. If you do not know enough about some of these factors to have an opinion, just let me know. How important is…

 

Note: Asked of one-half of respondents

 

 

Very important

Somewhat important

Not too important

Not at all important

Don’t know/ Refused

a. Too many doctors making mistakes in treating patients?

43

33

13

1

9

b. Too many patients making unwarranted claims against doctors?

53

23

9

6

9

c. Too many lawyers filing unwarranted lawsuits?

60

22

6

6

6

d. Too many juries making larger awards than are justified?

42

30

8

7

13

e. High profits made by insurance companies selling malpractice insurance?

 

49

28

5

5

12

 

 

Of those factors you said are very important in causing rising malpractice insurance costs, which one do you think is the MOST important reason these costs are rising?

 

Note: Also includes those who said “very important” to only one reason

                       

32         Too many lawyers filing unwarranted lawsuits

15         High profits made by insurance companies selling malpractice insurance

14         Too many patients making unwarranted claims against doctors

11         Too many doctors making mistakes in treating patients

9          Too many juries making larger awards than are justified

*          Other reason is most important

2          All same/equally important        

17         None of these very important    

*          Don’t know      

*          Refused           

 

Survey by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Harvard School of Public Health. Methodology: Fieldwork by ICR-International Communications Research, November 4-November 28, 2004 and based on telephone interviews with a national adult sample of 1,396. 

MC_Page5_HPR_Oct05

Published: Jan 18, 2006

(I’m going to read you a list of things some people worry about and others do not. I’d like you to tell me how worried you are about each of the following things.) How worried are you about…your health plan being more concerned about saving money for the plan than about what treatment is best for you? Are you very worried, somewhat worried, not too worried, or not at all worried?

 

Subpopulation/Note: Those who have health insurance

 

30%  Very worried

31   Somewhat worried

16   Not too worried

20   Not at all worried

4    Don’t know/Refused

 

Survey by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Methodology: Conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates International, October 4-October 9, 2005 and based on telephone interviews with a national adult sample of 1,200.

MC_Page4_HarrisPoll_Apr05

Published: Jan 18, 2006

Do you think…managed care companies such as HMOs (Health Maintenance Organizations) generally do a good or bad job of serving their consumers?

 

41%  Good job

54   Bad job

5    Not sure/Refused

 

Methodology: Conducted by Harris Interactive, April 5-April 10, 2005 and based on telephone interviews with a national adult sample of 1,010. Data provided by The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, University of Connecticut.

A Comparison of the Seventeen Approved Katrina Waivers

Published: Jan 1, 2006

This fact sheet summarizes and compares seventeen states’ approved Medicaid waivers related to Hurricane Katrina evacuees.

Fact Sheet (.pdf)

Resources on Medicaid Policy Changes in the Federal Budget Reconciliation Bill

Published: Jan 1, 2006

The Foundation’s Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured has collected resources related to the Medicaid policy changes in the budget reconciliation law, Deficit Reduction Act of 2005.

Deficit Reduction Act of 2005: Implications for Medicaid

West Virginia Medicaid State Plan Amendment: Key Program Changes and Questions

KYHealth Choices Medicaid Reform: Key Program Changes and Questions

Reports Explore Long-Term Care Issues Included in the Deficit Reduction Act

The Nuts and Bolts of Making Medicaid Policy Changes: An Overview and a Look at the Deficit Reduction Act

New Requirements for Citizenship Documentation in Medicaid

Key Issues and Opportunities: Implementing the New Medicaid Integrity Program

Paying for Nursing Home Care: Asset Transfer and Qualifying for Medicaid

Increasing Premiums and Cost Sharing in Medicaid and SCHIP: Recent State Experiences

Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment Services Fact Sheet

Medicaid 1915(c) Home and Community-Based Service Programs: Data Update

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KaiserEDU.org tutorial: Future Directions in Medicaid: Implications of the DRA of 2005 and 1115 Waivers

Paying for Nursing Home Care: Asset Transfer and Qualifying for Medicaid

Published: Dec 31, 2005

Paying for Nursing Home Care: Asset Transfer and Qualifying for Medicaid

This snapshot presents key facts on who relies on nursing home services and highlights research findings on asset transfer and its impact on Medicaid eligibility.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Medicaid and Budget Reconciliation:  Implications of the Conference Report

Published: Dec 31, 2005

Medicaid and Budget Reconciliation: Implications of the Conference Report

This issue brief provides an overview of the federal budget context and then highlights key Medicaid savings proposals in the budget reconciliation conference bill and discusses the implications of the proposed changes.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

What Happens When Public Coverage Is No Longer Available?

Published: Dec 30, 2005

This policy brief examines national data to determine the share of current enrollees of public health coverage programs who would have alternate coverage options if public coverage were no longer available. The authors estimate that no more than 9 percent of low-income adults would have access to an alternative source of insurance in the absence of public coverage. This research suggests that the vast majority of current enrollees affected by cutbacks in eligibility for public programs, particularly those with the lowest incomes, are likely to be left uninsured.

Issue Brief (.pdf)